Abstract

Climate information and agro-advisory services are crucial in helping smallholder farmers and pastoralists in East Africa manage climate-related risks and adapt to climate change. However, significant gaps exist in provision of climate information that effectively addresses the needs of farmers and pastoralists. Most farmers and pastoralists, therefore, rely on indigenous knowledge (IK), where local indicators and experiences are used to observe and forecast weather conditions. While IK-based forecasting is inbuilt and established in many communities in East Africa, coordinated research and systematic documentation of IK for weather forecasting, including accuracy and reliability of IK is largely lacking. This paper documents and synthesizes existing IK for weather forecasting in East Africa using case studies from Ethiopia, Tanzania, and Uganda. The results show that farmers and pastoralists use a combination of meteorological, biological, and astrological indicators to forecast local weather conditions. IK weather forecasting is, therefore, crucial in supporting efforts to improve access to climate information in East Africa, especially in resource-poor and vulnerable communities. The paper draws valuable lessons on how farmers and pastoralists in East Africa use IK weather forecasts for making crop and livestock production decisions and demonstrates that the trust and willingness to apply scientific forecasts by farmers and pastoralists is likely to increase when integrated with IK. Therefore, a systematic documentation of IK, and a framework for integrating IK and scientific weather forecasting from national meteorological agencies can improve accuracy, uptake, and use of weather forecasts.

Highlights

  • The Fifth Assessment Report of the International Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) shows evidence of increased warming across Africa in recent decades, consistent with anthropogenic climate change, and severely impacting climate-sensitive sectors (IPCC 2014)

  • Advanced knowledge of climate and weather information, coupled with agro-advisory services, has great potential to enhance capacity of farmers and pastoralists in East Africa to cope with climate variability and adapt to climate change, including improving management of climate-related risks in agriculture

  • Scientific seasonal weather forecasts provided by national meteorological agencies are often not downscaled and are provided for wide areas and generalized, less effective in addressing the needs of farmers and pastoralists

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Summary

Introduction

The Fifth Assessment Report of the International Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) shows evidence of increased warming across Africa in recent decades, consistent with anthropogenic climate change, and severely impacting climate-sensitive sectors (IPCC 2014). In East Africa, the anticipated impacts of climate change include increase in frequency and severity of extreme events such as droughts, floods, heavy rain storms, contributing to decline in crop. In East Africa, agriculture which employs a large proportion of the population is mainly rainfed and highly vulnerable to climate extremes and change. Availability of reliable climate information services and effective and efficient forecast information dissemination systems are crucial to support decision-making processes across scales. Advanced knowledge of climate information coupled with agro-advisories enhances capacity of farmers and pastoralists to cope with climate variability and adapt to climate change, and improves management of climate-related risks in agriculture. In East Africa, significant gaps still exist in provision of precise, location-specific, timely, and user-friendly climate and seasonal weather forecast information that effectively addresses the needs of farmers and pastoralists. Rely on indigenous knowledge (IK) for seasonal weather forecasts, where local-observed indicators and experiences are used to assess, forecast, and interpret local weather conditions and climate

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